LEVITT LAKESIDE MODERN

This “Levitt Lakeside Modern” is a large, architecturally significant waterfront home which will be spectacularly relocated in a single piece to your waterfront site!

The House Itself

Designed and built in 1969 by “Architect to the Stars,” Hal Levitt, from Southern California, the house is notable first for its sheer scale and clarity of plan. With 6,230 sq/ft of interior space arranged largely on a single level, the rooms are generous, well-proportioned, and deliberately separated into public and private zones. Ceiling heights vary throughout the house, reaching 11 to 13 feet in several primary living areas, lending a sense of openness and volume that is increasingly rare in contemporary construction. The main floor comprises 5,560 sq/ft of floor space, and a smaller portion, 570 sq/ft of the space is a “staff’s apartment” situated above two-car garage in an L-shaped configuration to the main parts of the house.

The interior spaces were clearly designed to accommodate both everyday living and large gatherings. Living and dining areas are expansive without feeling cavernous, while secondary rooms remain comfortably scaled and well connected. Multiple fireplaces, broad circulation paths, and wide openings between rooms reinforce the house’s emphasis on flow rather than compartmentalization. Throughout, the architecture favors calm progression and long sight-lines over dramatic gestures.

Architecture and Materials

The architectural language is confident and restrained: strong horizontal rooflines, deep overhangs, and extensive use quality materials and finishes anchor the house visually and structurally. Covered outdoor areas and large transitional spaces blur the boundary between inside and out, a hallmark of late-1960s modern residential design. This is a house that feels grounded and substantial, designed to age well rather than chase fashion. There have been extensive upgrades in the past, bringing the more public-facing parts of the house into the present with an upgraded kitchen, lighting, and electrical while keeping all of the architecturally important elements of the house pristine and original.

The Move

At approximately 130 feet in length, the relocation of this house is technically ambitious and unusually compelling. The plan is to move the structure in one piece, preserving its integrity and minimizing disruption to the building fabric. Moves of this scale are uncommon, but they are precisely the kind of challenge Nickel Bros is known for. The result will be a complete house—arriving whole, not reassembled—ready to be placed thoughtfully on its new waterfront site.

Designed for a Waterfront Setting

Although the site will change, the house’s relationship to water remains central. Its long elevations, covered terraces, generous glazing, and interior-to-exterior flow are ideally suited to a waterfront property. Relocated and oriented carefully, the house will feel neither transplanted nor compromised, but properly re-anchored to a setting that allows its design to function as intended.


Hal Levitt and the Architecture

Harold Warren “Hal” Levitt (1922–2003) was a Los Angeles–based modernist best known for designing refined, highly private residences for Hollywood’s cultural elite. Often described as the “Architect to the Stars,” Levitt built his reputation in Southern California by creating homes that emphasized discretion, proportion, and livability over architectural showmanship.

Among the most notable figures to have commissioned or owned Levitt-designed homes are Steven Spielberg, Dean Martin, Burt Lancaster, Debbie Reynolds, Quincy Jones, Lionel Richie, and Ellen DeGeneres. His appeal to this clientele was rooted in a consistent architectural approach: clear planning, generous but controlled spaces, strong indoor-outdoor relationships, and a material palette that conveyed permanence without ostentation.

While Levitt’s work is firmly associated with Hollywood and Southern California, his career includes a small and little-known Pacific Northwest chapter. A Levitt-designed waterfront home in Medina, Washington is often cited as his only documented commission in the region. Levitt Lakeside Modern expands that narrative. Long overlooked within Levitt’s body of work, the house reveals its authorship clearly when viewed alongside his California designs: the horizontal emphasis, the measured procession of spaces, and the quiet authority that defined his best work.

That this house remained largely unrecognized as a Levitt design for decades only adds to its intrigue. It stands as a rare Northwest expression of a modernist more commonly associated with Hollywood—an architectural outlier whose pedigree becomes unmistakable once you know where to look.

Harold W. Levitt: The Master of Hollywood Modernism

Harold Warren “Hal” Levitt (1922–2003) was a pivotal figure in mid-century residential design, operating at the intersection of high-stakes Modernism and the discrete glamour of Hollywood’s golden era. A graduate of Stanford and USC, Levitt refined his craft under the mentorship of legendary architects Roland Coate and Burton Schutt before establishing his own practice in Beverly Hills in the 1950s. He quickly became the architect of choice for Los Angeles’ cultural and cinematic elite, earning him the enduring moniker of “Architect to the Stars.”


 

An A-List Pedigree

Levitt’s commissions read like a historical registry of 20th-century entertainment. His ability to balance programmatic clarity with total privacy made his work essential for figures such as:

The Architectural Language

Levitt’s work is characterized by horizontal rigor and volumetric play. His designs emphasize the “long view,” utilizing deep roof overhangs and expansive glass planes to dissolve the boundary between the interior and the landscape. Unlike many of his contemporaries who favored stark industrialism, Levitt’s Modernism was grounded in permanent, substantial materials—stone, terrazzo, and high-grade timber—creating homes that felt authoritative rather than transient.

A Rare Northwest Chapter

While Levitt’s legacy is rooted in the canyons of Bel Air and the Trousdale Estates, he occasionally exported his California Modernism to the Pacific Northwest. For decades, his 1972 waterfront treasure on Fairweather Lane in Medina—famed for its 18-foot floor-to-ceiling windows—was considered his only documented regional commission.

The “Levitt Lakeside Modern” (1969) expands this narrative significantly. Long a “quiet” masterpiece in the Seattle area, the house reveals its undeniable authorship through its measured procession of spaces and its sophisticated, discrete entry sequences. Saving this structure is more than a relocation; it is the preservation of a rare northern outlier from one of the most influential residential architects of the 20th century.

Historical References & Further Exploration

The Northwest Connection

Iconic California Masterpieces

Architectural Archives


A Note on the Spielberg Connection: While Steven Spielberg’s semi-autobiographical film The Fabelmans explores the tract-home aesthetic of his youth, the director’s adult life has been defined by an appreciation for high-modern architecture. Spielberg’s ownership of a major Hal Levitt estate in Southern California is often cited as a testament to the architect’s ability to create “cinematic” spaces—homes that frame the landscape with the same intentionality as a director frames a shot.

DENNY CREEK MODERN RENO

Classic Craftsmanship, Fully Reimagined

This 1,300+ sq ft home offers a rare and compelling balance: the integrity and material quality of a 1920s house, paired with the performance and comfort of a modern rebuild. Originally constructed in 1920, the home was taken down to the studs and comprehensively rebuilt in 2018—resulting in a residence that lives like a new home while retaining the strength and character of old-growth construction.

The structure itself tells the story: fine-grain Douglas fir joists, beams, and rafters—materials that are notably denser and stronger than today’s standard lumber—form the backbone of the house. These original elements provide a solidity and permanence that are difficult to replicate, even in the best contemporary builds.

A True Studs-Out Transformation

The 2017 renovation was not cosmetic—it was foundational. All major systems were replaced or upgraded, including electrical, plumbing, heating, and appliances. The interior was thoughtfully reconfigured to support modern living, with open, well-proportioned spaces, vaulted ceilings, and strong sightlines that create a sense of volume without excess.

The kitchen and living areas are designed to be both practical and refined, featuring quality cabinetry, durable countertops, updated appliances, and clean, restrained finishes. Bedrooms and bathrooms are finished to the same standard, offering comfort and longevity rather than trend-driven design.

Ready for Its Next Chapter

What makes this home especially compelling is its adaptability. It offers the charm people value in older houses—real wood, proven construction, and thoughtful proportions—while delivering the reliability, efficiency, and convenience expected of a modern residence. In effect, it offers the best of both worlds: a house with history, rebuilt for the future.

Denny Creek Modern Reno is ready to begin its next life in a beautiful new setting, bringing together craftsmanship, design, and long-term value in a way few homes can.

 

OXFORD MCM

This classic MCM (mid-century modern) home has beautifully finishes & updates with Brazilian hardwood floors in the main living areas, a classic but modern (upgraded) 1950s-style kitchen, high-quality windows and MCM-style oversized blinds, an open-style living room and kitchen area, and generous bedroom sizes with cedar-lined closets and a large attached garage.

The main living area is 1,490 sq/ft, and the attached garage adds 480 sq/ft for a total of 1,970 sq/ft for the moved portion of the house. It had a daylight basement (1,250 sq/ft), making it a total of 2,740 sq/ft or as much as 3,944 sq/ft if you include the garage and build a complete lower floor under the moved house! Size is very flexible with your final creation (feel free to ask about your options).

This home has a short timeline of availability, but it’s worth the effort to inquire and put in an immediate offer, as this house can be moved to storage if necessary due to the impending demolition date. But act quickly or it may be gone soon…

Contact our office and reach out to Jeff to ask any questions you may have. This is a beautiful and well-built home with significant upgrades and renovations throughout!